Ty Segall Is Really Proud of His New Band, Fuzz. Just Don't Ask About Anything Else

In the wake of a prolific string of solo records and collaborations that has left the Pitchfork set fawning, garage-rock prodigy Ty Segall has formed a new band, Fuzz, a hard-hitting, three-piece Stooges-meets-Sabbath project in which he sings and plays drums. The name pretty much says it all about their sound: a full-on assault of syrupy, fuzz-tone riff-rock.

Segall recently moved back to the Southland, settling in East LA on the border of Eagle Rock and Silver Lake, after spending the better part of the past decade living in the Bay Area, first attending school at the University of San Francisco, and then furiously putting out more than a dozen releases beginning in 2008 (including three last year). All while criss-crossing the U.S., constantly on tour. Now 26, he's at a creative peak, booking major festivals and time on Letterman and Conan. He even has a signature-model reverb pedal.

In relative terms, 2013 has been a "slow" year for him. "I've actually been chilling out," Segall says in a quick phone interview before boarding a flight to Brooklyn, where Fuzz will be playing a two-night stand before heading home for shows in LA and Long Beach. "Me and Charlie [Moothart] were just talking about how we haven't been touring a ton lately, and it's been really nice. I'm surfing a lot."

His conversational tone has a surfer's lilt, something bred into him as a boy in Laguna Beach. He and regular guitarist Moothart were high-school pals who shared an affinity for not only the waterfront, but also punk, garage rock and loud music in general. Growing up surfing was fine for the South Countian, but his mecca was an hour north.

"We would hang out at the Smell up in LA, and that was kind of our motive for, like, starting to play out: We wanted to play the Smell," Segall recalls. "We were super into those bands. To be honest, back then, not to rip on Orange County, but it wasn't really the most rock & roll-friendly place. Now, there's, like, Burger Records and that whole scene."